DocumentCode :
51657
Title :
Measurement of Viscoelastic Properties of In Vivo Swine Myocardium Using Lamb Wave Dispersion Ultrasound Vibrometry (LDUV)
Author :
Urban, Matthew ; Pislaru, Cristina ; Nenadic, Ivan Z. ; Kinnick, Randall R. ; Greenleaf, James
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Physiol. & Biomed. Eng., Mayo Clinic Coll. of Med., Rochester, MN, USA
Volume :
32
Issue :
2
fYear :
2013
fDate :
Feb. 2013
Firstpage :
247
Lastpage :
261
Abstract :
Viscoelastic properties of the myocardium are important for normal cardiac function and may be altered by disease. Thus, quantification of these properties may aid with evaluation of the health of the heart. Lamb wave dispersion ultrasound vibrometry (LDUV) is a shear wave-based method that uses wave velocity dispersion to measure the underlying viscoelastic material properties of soft tissue with plate-like geometries. We tested this method in eight pigs in an open-chest preparation. A mechanical actuator was used to create harmonic, propagating mechanical waves in the myocardial wall. The motion was tracked using a high frame rate acquisition sequence, typically 2500 Hz. The velocities of wave propagation were measured over the 50-400 Hz frequency range in 50 Hz increments. Data were acquired over several cardiac cycles. Dispersion curves were fit with a viscoelastic, anti-symmetric Lamb wave model to obtain estimates of the shear elasticity, μ1, and viscosity, μ2 as defined by the Kelvin-Voigt rheological model. The sensitivity of the Lamb wave model was also studied using simulated data. We demonstrated that wave velocity measurements and Lamb wave theory allow one to estimate the variation of viscoelastic moduli of the myocardial walls in vivo throughout the course of the cardiac cycle.
Keywords :
biomechanics; biomedical ultrasonics; biorheology; data acquisition; diseases; elasticity; electrocardiography; image segmentation; image sequences; medical image processing; muscle; sensitivity; shear modulus; surface acoustic waves; ultrasonic dispersion; ultrasonic imaging; ultrasonic propagation; ultrasonic waves; viscoelasticity; viscosity; B-mode imaging; ECG; Kelvin-Voigt rheological model; Lamb wave dispersion ultrasound vibrometry; cardiac cycles; data acquisition; disease; dispersion curves; electrocardiography; frequency 2500 Hz; frequency 50 Hz to 400 Hz; harmonic mechanical wave propagation; heart; high frame rate acquisition sequence; image segmentation; in vivo swine myocardium; mechanical actuator; motion tracking; myocardial wall; normal cardiac function; open-chest preparation; plate-like geometries; shear elasticity; shear wave-based method; soft tissue; viscoelastic antisymmetric Lamb wave model; viscoelastic material properties; viscoelastic properties measurement; viscosity; wave velocity dispersion; wave velocity measurements; Dispersion; Heart; Imaging; Mathematical model; Myocardium; Ultrasonic imaging; Ultrasonic variables measurement; Dispersion; Lamb wave; myocardium; ultrasound; Algorithms; Animals; Echocardiography; Elastic Modulus; Elasticity Imaging Techniques; Heart; Image Enhancement; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Swine; Vibration; Viscosity;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0278-0062
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TMI.2012.2222656
Filename :
6323035
Link To Document :
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